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Janet Slissman Voice Seeker
Joined: 24 Oct 2007 Posts: 1
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Posted: Tue Dec 11, 2007, 20:45 (GMT) Post subject: Help ~ answering machine recording not good quality! |
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I recently hired 2 people thru Voice123 to produce and record a studio quality telephone greeting (with music) for my business that would be played over my AT&T Land Line (Digital 2.4GHz cordlessAT&T #2256) and my Verizon cell phone. The demo sounds terrific over the computer and they tried to download it into my answering system by accessing with passwords, but it does not sound good. Some feedback and the music does not sound good. What should we do? Got any ideas??? Is there something that I need to purchase? Or some tip that I can pass along to them? Any help greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Janet
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Haneen Arafat Talent and/or Voice Producer

Joined: 31 Aug 2006 Posts: 122
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Todd Ellis Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker

Joined: 27 May 2005 Posts: 817
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Posted: Wed Dec 12, 2007, 13:05 (GMT) Post subject: |
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unfortunately, that thread won't apply in this situation. since neither the at&t phone nor the verizon cell phone are KEY or PBX systems, they won't know how do deal with a mu-law file. in my experience, short of cracking the case on the phone and tapping into the hard-wired mic - there is not a really good way to do it. keep in mind that you're only going to get 24kpbs - mono over a POTS line (maybe 48kbps w/ VoIP) so the quality is going to be nowhere near what you hear from your stereo speakers from the git-go. _________________ From the rocking of the cradle to the rolling of the hearse ... the going up was worth the coming down. - Kris Kristofferson
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Johnny Milford Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker

Joined: 18 Jul 2007 Posts: 13
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Posted: Thu Dec 13, 2007, 14:59 (GMT) Post subject: |
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| I suspect they may not be using a proper phone patch to feed the audio down the line. In other words, are they simply holding the phone receiver up to a computer speaker? That would explain feedback and poor sound quality. Even so, as Todd pointed out, phone lines are quite limited in their frequency response and fidelity. That's not to say you can't have a good-sounding message. As I said, I suspect it's the method of transfer to blame here. Hope that helps! |
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Lance Blair Talent and/or Voice Producer - Voice Seeker

Joined: 25 Apr 2005 Posts: 591
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